Nigeria gives MTN 2 weeks to pay $5.2bn fine, JSE probes insider trading

JOHANNESBURG/LAGOS, Oct 30 (Reuters) – Nigeria’s telecoms regulator gave MTN Group two weeks to pay a $5.2 billion fine imposed on the mobile phone company for failure to cut off users with unregistered SIM cards, its spokesman said on Friday.

The Nigerian Communications Commission (NCC) imposed the penalty on Monday, hitting Africa’s biggest mobile phone operator’s stock price. Nigeria is MTN’s biggest market by subscribers.

MTN_Mobile_SA_shop_Slider

Some analysts have said the size of the fine risked damaging Nigeria’s efforts to shake off an image as a risky frontier market for international investors.

MTN had said on Monday the NCC imposed the fine for failing to disconnect subscribers with unregistered or incomplete SIM cards, under a directive given to all network operators which the regulator said only MTN had failed to comply with.

Read also:ย Nigeria aims two barrels at SA โ€“ MTN and Standard stagger

NCC spokesman Tony Ojobo said MTN had until Nov. 16 to make the payment, but the two sides were in talks to resolve the matter. “The outcome of the discussion may affect the date. That’s why they are having the discussion so that they can reach a solution,” Ojobo said.

Nigeria’s presidency and internal security agency were also involved in the talks, a regulatory source said.

MTN shares, up 3 percent at 159.03 rand by 0955 GMT in a slightly higher JSE Top-40 index, have slumped about 20 percent since Monday, knocking more than 60 billion rand ($4.4 billion) off the company’s market value.

If it stands, the penalty would wipe out more than two years of MTN’s annual profits.

MTN also said in a statement it was talking to Johannesburg bourse operator JSE Ltd about the timing of the announcement of the penalty. Its original confirmation of the fine came only after an online report by Nigeria’s Leadership newspaper.

Read also:ย RICA failure: Nigeria smacks MTN with massive fine, market cap dives R32bn

Under South African capital markets rules, companies are required to immediately warn shareholders of any materially price-sensitive information.

South Africa’s bourse probes timing of MTN‘s announcement of $5.2bn fine

JOHANNESBURG, Oct 30 (Reuters) – South Africa’s bourse operator, JSE Ltd, on Friday launched a investigation into the timing of the MTN Group’s announcement of a $5.2 billion fine imposed by Nigerian regulators on its unit in that country.

“The investigation will follow due process to establish whether there have been any breaches of the listings requirements and can be a lengthy process,” the head of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange’s regulatory division, Andre Visser, said in a statement.

Under South African capital markets rules, companies are required to immediately warn shareholders of any materially price-sensitive information.

Visited 32 times, 1 visit(s) today